Built 1721 (1721) NRHP Reference # 87000229 Area 6,100 m² Added to NRHP 13 March 1987 | MPS Barnstable MRA Opened 1721 Architectural style Georgian architecture | |
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Location 1606 Hyannis Rd., Barnstable, Massachusetts Similar Cahoon Museum of American, Craigville Beach - Barnstable, Follins Pond, Wianno Club, John F Kennedy Hyannis |
The Nathaniel Baker House is a historic house at 1606 Hyannis Road in Barnstable, Massachusetts. The house was probably built about 1721, and is a well-preserved example of an early Georgian hip-roofed house. It is also noted for its association with the locally prominent Baker family. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1987.
Description and history
The Nathaniel Baker House stands in a rural residential area of central northern Barnstable, on the east side of Hyannis Road, roughly opposite its junction with Maushop Avenue. It is a two story wood frame structure, with a hip roof, central chimney, and wooden shingle exterior. It has unadorned trim, with plain cornerboards, window and door trim. The house follows a basically rectangular plan, with a two-story hip-roof ell attached to one side of the rear.
The house was built about 1721 for Nathaniel Baker IV, possibly by his father Nathaniel Baker III, as a gift at the time of his wedding. Documentary sources support this general timeline, but there is some evidence that part of the house may be older. In 1778, Baker divided the house in two, deeding one half to his two daughters while he occupied the other half. He died in 1791, with an insolvent estate. The house was returned to single-family use in 1926. The house is one of six surviving Georgian five-bay houses in Barnstable.